Tim Hughes puts the boot into the highs and lows of the online travel business (with an Australasian/Asian bias) with some blogging about consuming and loving travel thrown in.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Australian Online Market for Short-Lets and Holiday Rentals: Interview with Occupancy.com joint-CEO Justin Butterworth Part 1

A war is brewing in the alternative accommodation sector in Australia. It is a war that generates a lot less press and pundit attention than the OTA and online hotel battles that consume so much of my time. But the battle for supremacy in online distribution of holiday homes, short term rentals and B&Bs is getting exciting. The latest salvo was the announcement that online corporate/short term rental specialist rentahome.com.au and holiday rental merchant TakeABreak merged to form Occupancy.com.

I had lunch recently with former rentahome.com.au boss and now Occupancy joint-CEO Justin Butterworth (pictured)to talk through the deal, the market and what's next for the online accommodation industry.In part 1 of this post I will share with you our discussions on the online market for short-let/holiday rentals in Australia.In part 2 we will look into the deal and what’s next.

The online short let/holiday rental market

It is a gross but reasonable generalisation that the online accom market is broken up into three sectors. Three sectors that overlap in sharing customers and suppliers but are distinct enough in their offering to be treated differently:

Mainstream Online Hotels Market: Led by Wotif but with HotelClub/Orbtizdisclosure), Expedia, Agoda/Bookings and Chain supplier direct sites making for a very competitive business. Online hotels market in Australia is between $1.5-2 billion a year and growing 15-30% (depending on the research firm);

The short let/holiday rental market is dramatically fragmented compared to the hotel market – goes without saying.Butterworth mentioned that a BIS Shrapnel report on the Holiday Home market in Australia which estimated 500,000 holiday home properties in Australia.Around 200,000 of those are available for regular short let.The rest being private holiday homes that are not regularly rented out.

Butterworth and I tried to figure out the size of online short let/holiday rental market.From our lunch time back of the envelope work we put the size of the Australia online holiday rental/short let market at between $450-500mm.This makes it a quarter to a third the size of the online hotel market.I have arrived at this number through combining two calculation methods – top down and bottom up.

Top down – start with the size of the total market and work downwards

We started with the 200,000 in available stock and assumed an average weekly rent of $1,000 and occupancy at 50%.This sets the full market size based on inventory story is $5.2 billion.Butterworth thought that around 10% of the market is online making a market for short let/holiday rentals of around $500 million.

Bottom up – start with the bookings generated/referred by the major players and work up

Here is what we know about the top players.I had to make a series of assumptions but I think the range is reasonable.

Occupancy joint-CEO told me they are generating $300mm in enquiries to properties per year but is not disclosing the percentage that are confirmed.Will assume 50%.

Realholidays.com.au (REA/News)

$45mm

Real holidays is 1% of REA’s AU revenue (pdf).AU revenue ~$150mm per year (pdf).Therefore Realholidays revenue $1.5m per year. If this was a hotel business, $1.5mm in revenue would mean $15mm in bookings generated.Sounds low so times 3.

Combining the top down and bottom up approaches gives us an online short let/holiday rental market size in Australia of $450-500.With the merger putting Occupancy.com’ estimated $150mm year putting them at #2 in the market to Stayz’s $160mm but not by much.Butterworth told me that Hitwise traffic data would put Stayz further ahead of Occupancy than my booking estimates would argue.He believes that Stayz has a lower conversion rates from enquiries. This would make sense as Stayz is likely to get much more unqualified traffic than Occupancy due to the referral of traffic from Fairfax Digital properties.

Much like online hotels, there are different models in the short let/holiday rental sector.The Stayz model is the listing model.Properties pay to be listed on the site.Occupancy.com operating on a booking fee model.Occupancy.com collects net rates and grosses up by the booking fee.Guests can process payment with Occupancy or pay the property direct (who remit booking fees to Occupancy.com).It is clear that the vast majority of the bookings are being paid offline with the property.

The market sizing proves that the online short let/holiday market in Australia is a substantive and growing market. The Occupancy merger puts a lot of pressure on Stayz as the combined volume has closed the gap to Stayz. But Fairfax, News Corp and Yahoo7! are tough competitors.I am looking forward to seeing how they respond. If the war wasn’t intense already, foreign players also have their eye on the market. US giant HomeAway (more on them here) have put up an Australian holding page at HomeAway.com.au – a clear indication of a push into the market.Expedia’s TripAdvisor have bought another holiday rental firm (Holiday Lettings) to add to Flipkey (already in their stable). No surprises.With a $500mm market to fight for, it is to be expected that many more companies will join Occupancy in this battle for short-let/holiday rental customers.

2 comments:

A very smart move by the founders of both companies to merge, as it will streamline the work load for property owners and the combined traffic from merger will ensure that they remain relevant with property owners

News & Fairfax entered into a distribution deal for carsguide.com.au & drive.com.au so that dealerships will be able to have a single point of contact for both sites and their combined business would mean that they could remain relevant to advertisers who are used to spending disproportionally on Carsales.com.au

Good luck to both companies as its great to see independent businesses taking risks to get an edge.

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